Comment by Alex Barth on February 18, 2011 at 5:22pm Open Source was a great topic. The natural extension would be Open Data. Todd Park's talk at the opening panel of "Open Source" was a great glimpse into the challenges in the field. Many organizations are busy opening their data, struggling with what to publish, how to publish and how to measure success. Time to put our heads together.
We had our first internal conversation about next topics and these came up:
Serious/Social Games
Water (“Tech@State: H20”)
Geospatial & Data Visualization
We're also discussing holding the next event outside the State Dept., but inside the DC metro area. Or maybe one in Silicon Valley. Even got a query for one from Senegal.
What do you think of these ideas and/or locations? Have any speaker suggestions for these or others? We're open to your thinking.
Comment by Lisa Wolfisch on February 23, 2011 at 4:09pm
Comment by Eric Gundersen on February 24, 2011 at 6:16pm We obviously love the suggestion of "Geospatial & Data Visualization." :) The topic is really heating up and I think there are some major developments in the space that will significantly increase the use of custom maps by government. We hope that MapBox will be one of them. We therefore would love to be part of the conversation.
Comment by Rebecca Lee on March 1, 2011 at 1:01am
Comment by Ben Clark on March 4, 2011 at 9:32am
Comment by Robert Bole on March 4, 2011 at 9:43am I would suggest that you enlist Kati London of (now) Zynga-NY, formerly called Area/Code games. She does amazing work in both digital/offline/hybrid games. For example, through a Knight Foundation award she and her team created Macon Money that is helping build community engagement in a very diverse, very separated community.
She was also hired by the UK to create an online game to teach - of all things - children to look both ways to cross the road. (Apparently, there is a rising incidence of children being hit as they run out into the road...potential of US TV/film that is conditioning children to "look the wrong way", you be the judge.) The result has been a very popular MMO the Code of Everand, which even after funding was cut, has been supported by the gaming community.
I saw Kati speak at SXSW last year, got to meet her at another gathering and have gotten to know her since then...wonderful presenter, passionate, smart as anything. A good addition for this session.
Comment by James BonTempo on March 4, 2011 at 12:35pm
Comment by Brian Zhang on March 4, 2011 at 2:43pm Serious/Social Games:
Jane McGonigal! http://janemcgonigal.com/
Her recent games, Urgent Evoke and World Without Oil (http://janemcgonigal.com/play-me/), have shown the power of removing the risk barrier of and increasing the individual feedback from tackling global issues.
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